Navigation Bar

Quote Generator

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Sexy Batman Villains

I've been looking for porn about thinking about Poison Ivy, the Batman villain. She's a good character, but for being a plant-woman, she sure exudes sexuality. In fact, that got me thinking about all the Batman villains, especially the difference between the guys and the girls.

I love Batman's villains because they all represent fractured psyches of the hero. Unlike just about any other comic book villain who are just about power, revenge, or greed. Enemies like the Joker represent chaos opposed to Batman's order. Bane is what happens when you have too much power. Two-Face is the double identity getting away from you. Scarecrow is fear (which Batman uses for good, but it's a double-edged sword). Riddler represents obsession. The Penguin represents... uh, deformity? Indulgence? Umbrellas? I'll get back to you on that one. Anyway, my point is the men are pretty diverse, all shapes and sizes.

The girls all represent some fractured psyche as well. Poison Ivy is the repressed schoolgirl becoming liberated. Catwoman is Batman's intellectual equal in the criminal world (bat rhymes with cat, you know). Harley Quinn is the female side of Joker's dementia, forever victim to his whims. Problem is, they're also all sex objects.

This is Catwoman's slide in Batman: Arkham City, where Batman has a practical feet-first soccer sweep.

They didn't start that way, but they've gotten way worse, and I don't like it. I can't find one picture Poison Ivy without her titties bouncing out as big as pumpkins. I don't know, maybe it's part of her character, something about flowers and vaginas. But all the others are the same way too. Harley Quinn is a Lolita -- pigtails and a gymnast's body with a skin-tight suit. Plus it's implied that she has a sexual relationship with Joker. Catwoman is the Lois Lane -- regular-sized, regular hair, regular boobs. The problem is she always wears skin-tight leather, carries a whip, and is constantly making innuendos.

You know it's always snowing in Arkham City, right?

The sad part (not the saddest part, I'll get to that) is that they didn't always used to be that way. Poison Ivy used to be just a seductress. Then she became an eco-terrorist, then a mad scientist. Then her storyline changed to her having the ability to create and resist poisons, then she could control plants a la Swamp Thing. The only thing she wears is a few conveniently placed leaves. Harley Quinn started on a children's cartoon show. And Catwoman didn't even wear a costume.

Catwoman's first appearance

But somehow, over the years, each of these characters went from being respectable to downright whorish. Catwoman went from Jean Harlow wearing a long purple dress to Michelle Pfeiffer's S & M fantasy. Harley Quinn went from comic relief to pedophile fodder. And Poison Ivy's just a porn actress now.

Harley's outfit in Arkham City. Somewhat different from her original incarnation.

The saddest part is that these three are about it. There are no other female villains in the Batman universe. And actually there aren't that many females period in the Batman universe. Oracle/Batgirl and Vicki Vale and that's it.

Poison Ivy's first look

Make no mistake. Batman is a male power fantasy so this is not unexpected. Ridiculous, but not unexpected. You don't need to make women into strippers to retain interest. In fact, it becomes implausible to have a cat burglar with her jacket halfway unzipped, or someone whose breasts are too big for her prison shirt to be closed.

Seriously, they let her get away with this outfit in Arkham Asylum? Or maybe she needs skin exposed for photosynthesis.

In fact, I think of all the superheroes, he might be the most "Republican-like". And I don't enjoy saying that. But he's a multi-billionaire philanthropist who inherited his money. For all intents and purposes, there's no way he could maintain his lifestyle and business and should have had his identity uncovered a long time ago (but again, fantasy). He has power and women, but a chip on his shoulder from mom and dad, and he's always trying to redeem himself for them.

The Dark Knight Returns had a significant poor vs. rich arc

Most of his adventures don't focus so much on saving the victim as catching the criminal. His enemies are extremist in character and represent chaos, power, and liberation. Not often greed or revenge. Batman is always trying to put things back the way they were. Victims tend to be faceless (and there's a few storylines where this is one of the messages) and the criminal is never ambiguous. It's always quite clear that they're doing bad.